Posted on 02/01/2007 8:40:57 AM PST by TitansAFC
Ann Coulter analyzes GOP Presidential hopefuls:
---Rudy Giuliani:
"I Think He's The Only Republican Who Can't Beat Hillary."
"I don't see him winning the Primary."
"If you can't get MY vote as a Republican against Hillary....."
---John McCain:
"Not a Conservative, but a patriot."
"A genuine war hero, unlike John Kerry."
"His weaknesses are half of his positions."
---Mitt Romney:
"Red stater in a blue state."
"Has a working knowledge of God."
---Newt Gingrich:
"Absolutely brilliant."
"His closet has certainly been thoroughly investigated already."
"I wish we could bring him in to pinch-hit for all presidential debates."
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
Personal guess -- Rudy wins the nomination. The Socials don't have the power they think they have. IMHO, of course.
|
Giuliani | Clinton | Dem Platform | GOP Platform |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abortion on Demand | Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Partial Birth Abortion | Supports Opposed NY ban |
Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Roe v. Wade | Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Taxpayer Funded Abortions | Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Embryonic Stem Cell Research | Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Federal Marriage Amendment | Opposes | Opposes | Opposes Defined at state level |
Supports |
Gay Domestic Partnership/ Civil Unions |
Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Openly Gay Military | Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Defense of Marriage Act | Opposes | Opposes | Opposes | Supports |
Amnesty for Illegal Aliens | Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Special Path to Citizenship for Illegal Aliens |
Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Tough Penalties for Employers of Illegal Aliens |
Opposes | Opposes | Opposes | Supports |
Sanctuary Cities/ Ignoring Immigration Law |
Supports | Supports | Supports | Opposes |
Protecting 2nd Amendment | Opposes |
Opposes | Opposes Supports bans |
Supports |
Confiscating Guns | Supports Confiscated as mayor. Even bragged. |
Supports | Supports Supports bans |
Opposes |
'Assault' Weapons Ban | Supports | Supports | Supports | |
Frivolous Lawsuits Against Gun Makers |
Supports Filed One Himself |
Supports | Opposes | |
Gun Registration/Licenses | Supports | Supports | Opposes | |
War in Afghanistan | Supports | Supports Voted for it |
Supports | Supports |
War in Iraq | Supports | Supports Voted for it |
Supports Weak support |
Supports |
Patriot Act | Supports | Supports Voted for it 2001 & 2006 |
Opposes | Supports |
I hold the voting laws sacred and I don't care who breaks them, they have lost any credibility with me.
Duncan Hunter vs. Hillary in the Electoral College:
Duncan : 134 Electoral Votes
Hillary: 404 Electoral Votes
Rudy Giuliani vs. Hillary in the Electoral College:
Rudy : 337 Electoral Votes
Hillary: 201 Electoral Votes
It was just the House -- Senate wasn't involved.
Well, this is just one social con talking, but I would ardently welcome a return of the issues/policies highlighted by the CWA.
What no one on the Anybody But Hillary side has yet to adequately explain to me is why the two sides (social/fiscal conservatism) are mutually exclusive.
The GOP wins when the nominee is an electable fiscal/social con (Reagan, Bush II before he lost his veto pen). The GOP loses when the candidate is squishy on fiscal and/or social issues (Ford/Dole/Bush I).
I realize it's just anecdotal, but 90-95% of the social cons I know are also ardent fiscal cons. Again, why must the candidate be mutually exclusive?
I wrote over a year ago that George Allen was the one candidate who could bridge that divide, which was why the 'Rats and the MSM worked so tirelessly to destroy him. Sadly, they succeeded.
Mark Sanford and/or Mike Pence might do the trick, but both have significant obstacles to overcome should they run, and neither has shown the inclination to do so. Haley Barbour is another possibility, but he also shows no desire to get into the ring.
Finally, JMHO, but I think the pro-Rudy/Romney/McCrazy frenzy on FR is generated less by people who want the GOP to win in 2008 and more by people whose personal political preference is to see the social cons kicked to the curb by the party. Sometimes I think there is as much antipithy towards the social con wing in the party as there is outside of the party.
Mark my words - they may be successful in throwing the social cons to the curb in the party, but they will never - NEVER - win a national election without us.
I agree with that as well. I know here in Oklahoma Rudy is remembered for being here for Gov Keating and Oklahoma after the OKC Bombing. He was immediately there to offer help and Gov Keating returned that help to him after 9-11. I was told by areafiftyone that there is a firetruck that goes through the city on calls that says Spirit of Oklahoma -- that was our donation to NYC along with teddy bears for the children of 9-11 who lost their parents.
Rudy stood with Oklahomans and I firmly believe this total red state will stand with Rudy.
A number of people I have talked with have vowed to never let social conservatives dictate again after 2006. Their message does not sell to the average American we have to reach out to for votes.
I think when the voters hear Rudy in person, they are going to flock to the polls in our primary to vote for him. He unites people with his positive message and his no nonsence approach to the WOT -- we have to win!
"And if they told you wolverines would make good house pets, would you believe them?"
-John Candy
Sounds like an Alan Colmes "gotcha" question.
Polls at this point are a name recognition contest. Nothing more. That's the way it's always been at this stage of the game. When Rudy's 9/11 Hero status expires and the media starts playing hardball, watch what happens to his poll numbers.
Um -- please correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't remember Reagan or Bush Sr. ever making any moves to outlaw abortion, or sanction Gays in any way . . .
I'd say the Rs win when the candidate stays away from social issues entirely, and only runs on the issues that unite us.
Unfortunatly, the Social Cs here are very loud about the fact that many, many of them consider Social Cs the only acceptable candidates. If a candidate is pro-choice, he's DoA to them, for example.
Following your statement to it's logical conclusion, then 99.99999999999999% of the populace has no credibility when it comes to criticizing any entrant into the race for president as they have not done so themselves. Further, we have no business criticizing any govt activity unless we've been there, done that ourselves, which once again leaves out the vast majority of the populace.
That's the same sort of mentaility the left espouses when any conservative makes a statement in favor of using the military to further our nation's interests. According to the left, if you haven't been in combat you have no business advocating for it.
I think you're speaking serious truth here. I violently agree!
What has changed?
I think we are in that period where it is "too late to work within the system and too early to shoot the bas$$$ds".
I believe it strongly.
Who is John Galt?
Well, you are wrong. After a misstep (SDOC), Reagan nominated the man who would have been the deciding vote in overturning RvW - Robert Bork, whose candidacy was then destroyed by...pro-abortion GOP senator Arlen Specter.
If you really question Reagan with regards to pro-life issues, read "Abortion and the Conscience of a Nation", written by RWR in 1983.
After rescinding the Mexico City policy at the outset of his presidency, W nominated a very solid SC chief justice (Roberts) and, after another misstep, followed up with another one (Alito) in the face of opposition from both the left and the pro-abort wing of the party.
As far as sanctioning gays in any way, I'm absolutely not interested, nor would I support any politician doing so - with the exception of prohibiting adoptions, since it's their most effective way of passing on their dysfunction to the next generation.
Pray for them? Yes. Sanction them? No.
I'd say the Rs win when the candidate stays away from social issues entirely, and only runs on the issues that unite us.
There is some logic to that train of thought, but only if the candidate is generally accepted to not be hostile to the pro-life movement.
McCain and Giuliani do not qualify, and I have serious doubts that Romney can pull it off.
Unfortunatly, the Social Cs here are very loud about the fact that many, many of them consider Social Cs the only acceptable candidates. If a candidate is pro-choice, he's DoA to them, for example.
Add me to that list...
I just posted this under bloggers from Red State:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1777501/posts?page=1
So when did the front runner for the GOP nomination since 1968 not end up being the nominee??
Actually, Bork wanted to throw the question back to the states, not outlaw abortion. His position was that there's just no 'right to privacy' in the constitution that guarantees abortion.
That's my position, too. I like the 'component architecture' the Constitution set out. States can make it illegal if they choose.
And if you're going to veto any pro-choice candidate even tho he's a political conservative, then that's the end of the R party, in my opinion.
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